WinStar Farm Promotes O’Rourke To Director Of Bloodstock Services; Desch Joins Stallion Season Sales Team

WinStar Farm has announced the promotion of Liam O'Rourke as its new Director of Bloodstock Services. In conjunction with O'Rourke's promotion, Olivia Desch joins Chris Knehr on the Stallion Season Sales team.

“We are fortunate to be in a position to promote from within,” said Elliott Walden, president, CEO, and racing manager of WinStar Farm. “Our team is deep with talent and we pride ourselves on hiring people that our clients enjoy working with. Liam has been an integral part of our team for the last four years and I have complete confidence in him.”

Originally from Toronto, Ontario, O'Rourke joined the WinStar bloodstock team in 2016.

“Since joining WinStar I have had the opportunity to work with and learn from some of the most talented people in the industry,” O'Rourke said. “While my main focus will remain on our stallion roster, I will now have the flexibility to expand into more bloodstock opportunities. I look forward to the new challenge and achieving shared success with the WinStar team and our shareholders.”

Desch, born and raised in Cincinnati, Ohio, has been with WinStar since 2019 when she was hired as a bloodstock assistant. She graduated from the University of Kentucky with a BS in Equine Science and Management and prepped yearlings for Lane's End prior to interning with WinStar in 2017.

“I am confident that our dedicated breeders will continue to have the best possible customer experience when they work with Chris Knehr and Olivia,” O'Rourke said. “Chris is a seasoned, knowledgeable team member and makes the breeding process easy for our customers. Olivia, through her hard work and dedication, has grown from an intern into a bloodstock and marketing assistant and now into a full-time bloodstock and sales role while gaining experience across a number of our divisions. Dedication to our clients will be the hallmark of this team.”

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Thoroughbred Idea Foundation: Run-Ups Cause Inaccuracies That Are ‘An Affront To Integrity’

Saratoga, Gulfstream and Kentucky Downs have all run races over wrong distances within the last six weeks – at least one half-furlong longer than the races were scheduled.

This 50th volume of #FreeDataFriday is not an explanation of some obscure method of timing races, it offers merely a sobering fact, easily exposed BECAUSE of the way in which America times horse races.

First, understand that nearly every distance of a race run in North America is not the actual distance traveled, but the distance which is timed. Horses run-up to the starting point and reach the spot which is the published race distance away from the finish, and then the clock starts. It might be 30 feet, 50 feet, 70 feet or more. It depends on many factors.

Yes, we think this is the wrong way to time races, but at least we know that run-up exists.

But when the un-timed portion of a race is a half-furlong (1/16th of a mile) or more, and those wagering on that, riding in those races or preparing horses for such events are either unaware or not properly informed of this? Well, that's a problem – for the integrity of the sport and for the confidence of stakeholders.

Saratoga ran the Grade 2 Bowling Green on August 1, 2020 at a reported 1 3/8 miles on turf – the race was likely at least 1 7/16th miles, more than a half-furlong farther than reported to anyone, including owners of horses in the race, jockeys who rode it and the bettors who staked more than $1.7 million on this race.

Last Saturday, September 5, Gulfstream Park ran two listed, black-type awarding stakes (the Bear's Den and Miss Gracie) at a reported “about” 7.5 furlongs on the turf. The races were very likely about 540 feet, or roughly four-fifths of a furlong longer than that, much closer to 8.5 furlongs.

On Monday, September 7, Kentucky Downs ran four races at 6 ½ furlongs. The reported “run-up” for the race, acquired via the new Equibase-serviced Gmax timing and tracking system, was 330 feet, a distance that equates to a half-furlong. In other words, horses actually ran seven furlongs. The charts for these races (R2, R6, R7) are HERE – but a replay can be found via ADW replay providers.

The circumstances of all of these races, and the impact of the extra ground covered, and the degree of harm done by presenting customers with these errors, assuredly, varies.

Here is what we know.

The times of all the races in question are not necessarily wrong – all of the races are timed from the point that is the published distance of the race from the finish. What that means is that the clock starts WELL after the race has actually commenced and makes it remarkably easy to “see” these errors.

In other words, once the horses get to the point that is 1 3/8 miles from the Saratoga finish, or 6.5 furlongs from the finish at Kentucky Downs – the timing system in place starts. Saratoga uses beam-based times, Gulfstream uses Trakus and Kentucky Downs is a new user of the Equibase-enabled Gmax. But an examination of the actual time the horses are racing differs substantially from the official times.

In all of the races noted above, horses raced for no less than seven seconds before the timer began and, again, the fractions recorded for each race are not disputed. At Gulfstream, horses ran for more than 11 seconds, a duration that is the equivalent of 12.5% of the actual time recorded for the race.

Below, review the chart which shows the observed times from video, either via YouTube or replays available from most ADWs, the actual time horses were racing according to those observations, a “hand-time” using a stopwatch from the break of the gate to the finish, the official time of the race as it was reported and the variance between the hand time and the official time.

The variances, in orange on the right, tell the tale. The actual time horses are racing is substantially longer than what is reported to the public. If there are approximately six horse lengths in one second (1 length = approximately 0.16 seconds), then a variance of 7.63 seconds is the equivalent of 45.6 lengths. A variance of 11.34 seconds is the equivalent of 68 lengths.

This is madness.

Over $6.8 million was wagered just within these individual races.

There seems to be a reckless disregard for the truth from track operators as it relates to running races at the distances they schedule.

Here are some questions:

1. Would a horse that won the Bowling Green have been demoted from first to fourth horse if the race was run over the published distance of 1 3/8 miles instead of the actual distance of 1 7/16 miles, given that the interference occurred in the “last half-furlong” of a race that was already a half-furlong too long? (Saratoga)

2. Would a filly have earned black-type for the first time, potentially increasing her future value, if the race was actually contested over 7.5 furlongs instead of nearly 8.5 furlongs? (Gulfstream)

3. Will bettors have won or lost because their analysis and bets were formulated and executed believing the distance published by the track, replicated and sold by Equibase, further sold and distributed by downstream providers like the Daily Racing Form, TimeformUS, Thoro-Graph, BRIS and Ragozin, was accurate?

4. Will regulators – state racing commissions – step forward and hold operators accountable to ensure accuracy in the distances and times of races run in their jurisdictions? (Kentucky, New York. Florida does not have a racing commission)

5. What are the challenges keeping track operators from running races at the distances THEY set and how can they be overcome to ensure accuracy for all?
As it relates to the last question, some of these answers are clear.

Elements of tradition (“this is the way we've always done x”), course management, and safety concerns are the cause of these issues, while the product leaves us with duped customers or participants – bettors, horsemen, jockeys and fans. Accuracy matters, or at least, it should.

INACCURACY IS AN INTEGRITY CONCERN

North American racing does not time races from the break of the gate. Almost every race is run over a distance LONGER than what is published. But run-up on dirt races is normally consistent, and as all seven examples above are turf races, it is clear that portable rails and turf management are partial causes, or exacerbating, the problem.

But how much run-up is too much?

The answer to this should be, at the very least, when the run-up is a half-furlong or more considering the sport still measures distances in such ways.

Over the last year, the #FreeDataFriday series has covered a plethora of issues which impact racing. At its heart, this has been about the need to see access to racing data improved, preferably at reduced price points, and used to attract new customers to racing's wagering markets. Remarkably, though, it seems the sport either fails to either check its own basic math on occasion, or worse, just ignores it.

Not only does accuracy matter, but inaccuracy is an affront to integrity.

Look at how long these “errors” are when extrapolated over a map of Gulfstream, in this example below. Using simple Google Map analysis, with the rail set at 108 feet off the inside, the red dot is located where the gate was approximately placed and the yellow dot roughly 540 feet beyond that (a total of 648 feet of measured distance on the map). This point is already on the first turn and is roughly the spot which is 7.5 furlongs from the finish at this rail setting where the timing would begin.

To give added perspective, consider this – 540 feet is more than half the distance from the top of the stretch to the finish in dirt races at Gulfstream. The image below provides more context. The yellow dot representing 540 feet back from the finish line.

SOLUTIONS

Those races at Gulfstream were “about” 7.5 furlongs like the Kentucky Derby is “about” 1 1/8 miles, which is to say, it isn't. In 2020, racetracks in America should be running, timing and reporting the exact distance of a race as it is scheduled. Not 7.5 furlongs with 540 feet of run-up, not 6.5 furlongs with 330 feet of run-up. Schedule it, offer betting on it and run it at a precise distance. Precision, in both reporting and execution, are needlessly tricky.

The simplest solution is for North American tracks to start accurately reporting existing distances, using existing measures, with completeness. Races at six furlongs on dirt at Churchill Downs have a run-up of 220 feet. The timed portion of the race may be six furlongs, but the race is contested over a distance that is really six furlongs and 73 yards. If you can be disqualified for an offense in an untimed portion of the race, why can't we report (and time) the actual distance horses run?

What might be more precise? Yes, the metric system. It's easier than it seems.
That same Churchill race reported as six furlongs and 73 yards would be 1,274 meters.

Unarguably, the metric system presents one standard measure, boiled down to a precise, uniform number, and something we accept in human racing around the world, at both the highest levels of professional competition and the lowest levels of amateur, even children's sports. Oh, it's used in racing too…just not here…yet.

Regardless of the measurement used, accuracy is easily the most important need.

Racing must start timing from the break of the gate, not some point which is the published race distance from the finish while the gate itself is positioned quasi-arbitrarily behind that point, 50 feet, 150 feet, or as was the case in the last week, maybe between 330 to 540 feet away from the actual point that is the distance everyone otherwise believes.

There are significant costs associated with this development too, but they must be borne.

This status quo is fraudulent to horse owners and bettors and misleading to jockeys. These frauds, perpetrated on the public, could leave tracks open to litigation from aggrieved customers.

Our sport, and its operators and regulators, are not taking it seriously. The actions needed to correct these errors are clear. It is up to those same entities to take those measures and ensure accuracy.

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Honor Roll Presented By The Runhappy Meet At Kentucky Downs: Social Paranoia’s Road From The Sale Ring To The Dueling Grounds Derby

Joe Seitz remembers $75,000 being a “fair price” when the now 4-year-old Social Paranoia sold as part of the Brookdale Sales consignment at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky July Yearling Sale in 2017.

Street Boss, the colt's sire, was standing for $10,000 live foal at Darley when Social Paranoia was conceived, so 7.5 times the stud fee was a profitable multiple for his breeders, Mineola Farm and Silent Grove Farm.

Social Paranoia's buyer and current owner, Stuart Grant's The Elkstone Group, has enjoyed an even higher multiple off the purchase price. After 15 career starts for trainer Todd Pletcher, Social Paranoia has earned $929,710, more than one-third of that coming from his 2019 victory at Kentucky Downs in the $600,000 Exacta Systems Dueling Grounds Derby.

Ridden by Jose Ortiz, Social Paranoia raced closed to the lead on the European-style turf layout at Kentucky Downs, moved to the lead inside the furlong pole and edged clear late to win by a half-length. His time of 2:08.50 for 1 5/16 miles established a new course record.

“I remember him clearly when he was at Fasig-Tipton,” Seitz said recently. “He was very popular, an awesome sale horse. We got $75,000, which was a fine price, but I had hoped he would do more.

“Fortunately, he got in the right hands, with Stuart Grant and Todd Pletcher.”

Slow to leave the maiden ranks (though he was third in the Grade 3 Pilgrim in the last of five starts at two), Social Paranoia scored his initial career win in his first start at three at Gulfstream Park and has exclusively competed in stakes competition ever since.

His big score at Kentucky Downs was the final start of 2019 for Social Paranoia, who began his 2020 campaign with a victory in the G3 Appleton Stakes at Gulfstream. Most recently he unleashed a furious stretch rally to win the G3 Poker Stakes at Belmont on July 4. He's just resumed training after a minor setback following the Poker and was not nominated for any stakes at the upcoming Runhappy Kentucky Downs meet, according to Pletcher.

Brookdale will be offering a full-brother to Social Paranoia in Book 2 of the Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

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Grade 1 Winner, Breeders’ Cup Hopeful Ollie’s Candy To Be Offered At Keeneland November Sale

The ultra-consistent Ollie's Candy, a Grade 1 winner on dirt who is Grade 1-placed on turf, is scheduled to compete in the Breeders' Cup Distaff at Keeneland on Nov. 7 and two days later be offered as a racing or broodmare prospect during the premier Book 1 of the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale.

Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent, will consign the 5-year-old daughter of leading sire Candy Ride, who has been first, second or third in 12 of 14 starts from coast to coast while defeating 24 graded winners and nine Grade 1 winners. She has earned $830,151.

“Ollie's Candy's Grade 1 talent combined with her pedigree and conformation make her a tremendous prospect to offer this November,” said Mark Taylor, Taylor Made's vice president of marketing and public sales operations. “I also love the fact that she is an open book to breed to many of the top stallions from around the globe.”

Ollie's Candy, an alumnus of Keeneland's 2016 September Yearling Sale, is out of Afternoon Stroll, a daughter of Stroll who won Keeneland's Grade 3 Appalachian and is the dam of three winners from three foals.

Based in Southern California, Ollie's Candy has competed at the highest level of her division while traveling across the U.S. She won the 2019 G1 Clement L. Hirsch at Del Mar and was second in the race this year. Her 2020 campaign also includes a second in the G1 Apple Blossom at Oaklawn and third-place finishes in the G1 Beholder Mile at Santa Anita and G1 Ogden Phipps at Belmont.

The mare is pointed to the Oct. 4 G1 Juddmonte Spinster at Keeneland during the prestigious Fall Stars Weekend on the opening three days of the Fall Meet. The stakes is a “Win and You're In” race for the Breeders' Cup Distaff.

Ollie's Candy has been an outstanding performer since she began her career at three and won her first three races, including the G2 Summertime Oaks at Santa Anita. On turf at Del Mar, she was second in both the G1 Del Mar Oaks Presented by The Jockey Club and G2 San Clemente.

Last year, Ollie's Candy won the Clement L. Hirsch after finishing second in the G3 Wilshire on turf at Santa Anita. She also was third in the G2 Zenyatta and fourth in the Breeders' Cup Distaff at Santa Anita.

“Ollie's Candy exemplifies the finest in Thoroughbred racing and has a global appeal that makes her an invaluable addition to any broodmare band,” Keeneland President-Elect and Interim Head of Sales Shannon Arvin said. “Keeneland is pleased to offer a broodmare prospect of her class, talent and promise.”

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